Inquisitor 1894: In the Groove by Kruger

It’s Joyce here with her first Inquisitor blog.

The preamble: Wordplay in most clues fails to provide one or more letters of the defined entry. These omitted letters form the members of a set and should be highlighted in the completed grid. Contents of the initially shaded cells can be arranged to give an associate member which should be written below the grid.

As always, we just get stuck into the crossword without thinking too much about what is in the preamble.

EYEBROW (1ac) came first and then ENDGAME (1d) which we thought may be a double definition, although we weren’t convinced. Having solved 6ac, 4d, 5d, 6d, and 7d we realised that the 3rd letter in each entry is not covered by the wordplay in the clues – giving us DESTRO?? in the 3rd row. When we solved 10ac and 16ac (with no ‘spare’ letters), and 13d with an isolated A in the 3rd row we realised that this A had to be associated with DESTRO??. We had difficulty with the expressionist painter at 14d, but found the R in 2d, giving us AR?DESTRO??, or if 1d was not a double definition, DAR?DESTRO??. We decided it had to be DESTROYER, with 15ac having no wordplay – very sneaky, Kruger!

Meanwhile, having solved 17ac, 20ac, 23ac and 26ac, we had BEAS??? appearing in the final column and our first thought was that we may have the names of Gladiators from the TV series. We don’t watch it, but our grandchildren like posing as the different characters while others have to guess who they are. We guessed that we may have BEAST in the last column and a quick search revealed that we were not looking for Gladiators but various ‘Chasers’ from the TV programme, ‘The Chase’ – DARK DESTROYER being another. We’ve never watched this programme either but once we were on the webpage we saw the names of some of the other ‘chasers’ – and confirmed that 1d is not a double definition!

This meant that we were able to fill in some of the characters rather too quickly as we worked our way through the clues.

Our favourite clue was 35D – VALUE but we weren’t so keen on A VENUE –  you removed the letter in the parsing but then re-instated the same letter in the grid.

We had to ask for some help from the IQ blogging team for 25ac. We kept thinking that there was an error as we had an E at the start for the first letter or ‘introduction’ to evidence but this E should not have been included in the wordplay. We completely missed the double definition.

Thanks Kruger – some interesting clues but once we had the missing characters we were able to fill quite a bit of the grid – perhaps we shouldn’t have checked our first guess at the theme.

The title comes from  CHASE – another word for a groove.

Bradley Walsh is the host – the missing character, made by rearranging the letters in the initially shaded cells

Letters not provided by wordplay are in (GREEN) below
ACROSS
1. Hairy arch English bowyer shot (7)
EYEBROW

E (English) and an anagram (‘shot’) of BOWYER

6. Some of the first grade camelids hard to replace before food (6)
ALPHAS

ALPacAS (camelids) with H (hard) replacing ‘ac’ (ante cibum – before food)

10. Stonehenge constructed without last of earth and stone from certain geological epoch (7)
NEOGENE

An anagram (‘constructed’) of stONEhENGE without ‘h’ (last letter of earth) and ‘st’ (stone)

11. Nimble agent overcomes resistance (4)
SPRY

SPY (agent) around or ‘overcoming’ R (resistance)

15. Hearing in law court no longer up to date (4)
(OYER)

Definition only – no word play

16. Make fun of entertaining faceless French female fielder (6)
GULLEY

GUY (make fun of) around or ‘entertaining’ eLLE (French female) missing first letter or ‘faceless’

17. Aerofoil at rim repaired on tail of jet (7)
TRIMTA(B)

An anagram (‘repaired’) of AT RIM after T (last letter or ‘tail’ of jet)

18. As compounds mysteriously start to resurface in sea (7)
AR(S)INES

An anagram (‘mysteriously’) of R (first letter or ‘start’ to resurface) and IN SEA – ‘As’ is the chemical symbol for Arsenic

20. Cockney to impede progress of physicist from Lyon (6)
AMPER(E)

hAMPER (impede) but dropping the ‘h’ as a Cockney may say it

21. Embrace introduction of NATO power (5)
(I)NARM

N (first letter or ‘introduction’ to NATO) ARM (power)

23. Italy not completely corrupt country (6)
LAT(V)I(A)

An anagram (‘corrupt’) of ITALy missing last letter or ‘not completely’

25. Determined man to remain to finish the introduction of evidence (6)
(E)R(N)EST

A double definition – REST (to remain) and REST (to finish the introduction of evidence as used in court – ‘I rest my case’)

26. Straight head of machete cuts grass (6)
STR(I)M(S)

STR (straight) and M (first letter or ‘head’ of machete)

29. Condition of Doc (maybe asthma) is misdiagnosed somewhat (6)
(N)A(N)ISM

Hidden (‘somewhat’) in asthmA IS Misdiagnosed. The Doc referred to is one of the dwarfs in Snow White,

32. I got out of farewell of two from Paris (5, 2 words)
A DEU(X)

‘I’ removed or ‘got out of’ ADiEU (farewell)

34. Second character avoiding meeting place entrance (6)
AV(E)NUE

A VeNUE (meeting place) missing the second letter

36. Jock’s too bright to include books in theft (7)
ROBB(E)RY

RORY (Scottish word for too bright) around or ‘including’ BB (books)

37. Adult covering dead body (7)
(C)A(R)CASE

A (adult) CASE (covering)

39. Confined place accommodates current slot machine (6)
COI(N)OP

COOP (confined space) around or ‘accommodating’ I (current)

42. Muppet’s essentially slow (4)
(E)L(M)O

Middle or ‘essential’ letters of sLOw

43. Husbands approve (4)
(A)MEN

MEN (husbands)

44. Nice display stand about to be put on floor there (7)
ETAGERE

RE (about) put onto ETAGE (French for floor) – ‘Nice’ referring to the French city

45. Trojan prince aged eleven already, from the outset, succeeded (6)
AE(N)EAS

AE (‘aetatis’ – ‘aged’) + first letters (‘from the outset’) of Eleven Already + S (succeeded)

46. Relapsed drug smuggler, breaking resolution of the past, lights up again (7)
RELUMES

A reversal (‘relapse’) of MULE (drug smuggler) inside or ‘breaking’ RES (resolution)

DOWN
1. Final stage of disengagement (7)
EN(D)GA(ME)

Hidden (‘of’) in disENGAgement

2. Aged nobleman oddly looked upset (4)
EO(R)L

A reversal (‘upset’) of the odd letters in LoOkEd

3. Browning’s interpretation of laird’s enclosure (4)
RE(D)E

REE (an enclosure in Scotland) – hence ‘the laird’s enclosure’

4. Playwright’s unsubstantiated word with respect to year with former monarch (6)
ON(E)YER

ON (with respect to) Y (year) ER (former monarch) – A Shakespearean word with an unsubstantiated meaning

5. Feeble non-communist countries in Europe and North America (4)
WE(S)T

WET (feeble)

6. All-pervading damage to top of reactor, alas (6)
AS(T)RAL

An anagram (‘damage’) of R (first letter or ‘top’ of reactor) and ALAS

7. Instigate press release by representative on time (6)
PR(O)MPT

PR (press release) MP (representative) T (time)

8. Forgotten to approach frogs mounting (5)
AN(E)AR

A reversal (‘mounting’) of RANA (genus of frogs) – an old (forgotten) word meaning ‘to approach’

9. Very good service (4)
SO(RB)

SO (very good) – a sorb is a service tree

12. Irrational male worried archbishop (7)
P(R)IMATE

PI (irrational number) M (male) ATE (‘worried’)

13. Argentina follows our unusual appearance in the sky (6)
(A)URORA

RA (Republic of Argentina) after an anagram (‘unusual’) of OUR

14. Story about North American expressionist painter (5)
(K)LINE

LIE (story) about N (North)

19. Defame one interrupting return of prince (5)
SMEAR

ME (one) inside or ‘interrupting’ a reversal (‘returning’) of RAS (prince)

22. Moderate idiot associated with Middle East states (7)
ASSUA(G)E

ASS (idiot) UAE (United Arab Emirates – ‘Middle East States’)

24. Half of unlikely performances unprepared (6)
IMPRO(S)

Half of IMPRObable (unlikely)

27. Puzzling man lost King Edmund’s gem (5)
RUBI(N)

RUBIk (the puzzling man – Erno Rubik) losing K (king) –  a Spenserian spelling of Ruby

28. Means of stopping bleeding in WW1 battlefield not right (7)
(ST)YP(S)ES

YPrES (WWI battlefield) losing R (right)

30. Cobalt mine somehow made profit (6)
INCOME

An anagram (‘somehow’) of CO (cobalt) and MINE

31. Particles of nitrogen in disorder (6)
MES(O)NS

N (nitrogen) in MESS (disorder)

33. Catholic in decay – a heretic once (6)
DOC(E)TE

C (catholic) in DOTE (decay) – a new meaning of ‘dote’ for us

35. Price of very posh beer bottles (5)
VALUE

V (very) + U (posh) inside or ‘bottled’ by ALE (beer)

37. Cheyenne’s pouches are coloured at the front (4)
(CE)CA

A (are) with C (coloured) at the front – the American (‘Cheyenne’) spelling of caeca – small pouches in the alimentary canal

38. Smoke almost rising continually (4)
E(V)ER

A reversal (‘rising’) of REEk (smoke) missing last letter or ‘almost’

40. Unwritten middle sections of score greatly troublesome (4)
O(R)AL

Middle letters of scOre greAtly troubLesome

41. Yours truly climbing Indian tree (4)
(NE)EM

ME (yours truly) reversed or ‘climbing’

7 comments on “Inquisitor 1894: In the Groove by Kruger”

  1. I had filled most of the top half and started in the bottom half when the string of letters DARKDESTRO suddenly stood out. The likely theme thereby revealed itself, prompting me to shade what ‘omitted letters’ I already had in the grid. After DARK DESTROYER, BEAST and VIXEN soon followed, and obviously the associate was going to be Bradley Walsh.

    This was a well-constructed Inquisitor, and quite challenging to solve for a while because of the (potential) omitted letters. The bottom half became more straightforward when GOVERNESS and SINNERMAN became evident. I was impressed by the symmetrical grid, bearing in mind that three long names, as well as the three shorter ones, had to be accommodated. Once again, I enjoyed a good set of Inquisitor clues.

    Thanks to Kruger for his umpteenth Inquisitor and to Joyce for her first blog.

  2. Another enjoyable challenge. Thanks to Kruger and Joyce.

    I too first noticed the many unclued letters in the third row and eventually got to DARK DESTROYER, which alas meant nothing to me. Adding BEAST and VIXEN gave vaguely heavy-metal vibes, and I Googled expecting a rock group. Instead, of course, the truth was revealed. Never watched the show but had heard of it and its host thanks to the Private Eye “Dumb Britain” feature (and “Sinnerman” from some dimly remembered news story). Nifty construction, and a satisfying outcome even for the lesser breeds who don’t follow quiz shows!

  3. Pleased to see Kruger’s name as one of my favourites last year was ‘From A to B (and Back Again)’. Also nice to see a popular culture theme, makes a change from Greek mythology and whatnot 🙂 My only little eyebrow wiggle (apart from not cluing any of the letters in OYER, technically fair if somewhat cheeky) was that the method of inserting Bradley Walsh into the proceedings was a little… arbitrary? I guess the rest of the grid construction was complicated enough without working in another name, but I think the puzzle would have worked perfectly well without that final ‘flourish’.

    Many thanks!

  4. I can’t decide whether the OYER clue is the setter deploying a legitimate weapon from their armoury, or abruptly deciding that the game we are all playing is no longer Rugby Union but Rugby League, with the rules changing accordingly. If it weren’t that the answer became unmistakeable as the DARK DESTROYER emerged, I would probably still be fretting over how the cryptic grammar could work and what I might be missing. Thanks to Kruger and to Joyce (incidentally, on the helpful filled-in grid above, AENEAS is misprinted).

  5. Thanks to all those who have commented already. Also, a special thank you to Sagittarius who spotted my error. We use a blogging tool, but for IQs you have to create your own grid so it is really difficult to alter it once it is in the blog. Bert checked the parsing and added a few finishing touches as I do to his blogs, but we both missed the error which meant that the wrong letter was shaded for BRADLEY WALSH.
    Apologies to everyone – especially Kruger.

  6. Another good Inquisitor; I enjoyed the way the chasers were generated, and ‘oyer’, because it was inevitable, made me smile. I delayed going to a search engine, until Dark Destroyer, Vixen and Governess made it perfectly clear I had no idea what was going on. Thanks to Kruger and Joyce.

  7. Bert here: thanks to Sagittarius@4 for pointing out the mistyped grid entry at 45ac – now corrected in the grid image.

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